Samsung could wait even longer to begin sales of its Galaxy Tab in Australia. A Federal Court judge hinted she may okay a “brief” injunction while she studies Apple’s patent-infringement claims. The suggestion came during the start of a two-day court hearing on whether sales by the Korean tablet manufacturer should be halted in Australia.

Justice Annabelle Bennett told both parties it would be best if the issues was resolved quickly. “Technology moves very quickly,” she noted, according to Bloomberg. Apple’s lawyer, Steven Burley, told the judge Monday that the tech giant would be ready to go to trial next week.

Samsung, which last week announced it would more aggressively contest Apple’s claims, said “This is where we draw the line.” The South Korean firm’s lawyer, David Catterns, told Bennett the court case is a “high-stakes fight” yet felt any resolution of the matter could take “well into next year.” Earlier this month, Samsung countersued Apple, claiming the iPad infringes seven patents.

For now, Samsung has agreed to hold off advertising and selling the Galaxy Tab 10.1. It’s “as plain as the Opera House to Samsung” that the Tab 10.1 infringes upon the iPad, Burley said. Apple contents Samsung has reduced the Galaxy Tab 10.1 functionality to avoid infringement claims. At a Monday, hearing Apple keyed-in on just one technology used for the iPad’s touchscreen, a patent Samsung appears to have agreed not to fight, according to the news report.

Apple has successfully sued Samsung in Germany. Earlier this month, a court in that European nation imposed a sales injunction on the smaller Galaxy Tab 7.7. Another German court has temporarily banned the Galaxy 10.1 until a patent-infringement trial takes place.

Note to Samsung: make something that isn’t a close copy to a competitor’s product, and maybe you wouldn’t have to pay your legal team so much.

Fearless_fred

So, from your piece you say ” A Federal Court judge hinted she may okay a “brief” injunction”. and something that’s got two very big qualifiers (“HINTED” and “MAY”) becomes “Apple Wins”.

That headline needs to be changed. Apple hasn’t won anything yet, not even a brief injunction.

Oh, and while you’re mentioning that Apple have won an injunction in the German courts, you should also add that they lost all bar one of their claims in the court in the Netherlands. It’s only fair to report *all* news, not just the headlines that you like.

About the author

Ed Sutherland is a veteran technology journalist who first heard of Apple when they grew on trees, Yahoo was run out of a Stanford dorm and Google was an unknown upstart. Since then, Sutherland has covered the whole technology landscape, concentrating on tracking the trends and figuring out the finances of large (and small) technology companies.

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